PAKISTAN: The ongoing problem of forced disappearances
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 2, 2009 ALRC-CWS-10-15-2009
Language(s): English only
HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL Tenth session
A written statement submitted by the Asian Legal Resource Centre (ALRC), a non-governmental organisation with general consultative status
PAKISTAN: The ongoing problem of forced disappearances
The problem of forced disappearances has been significant in Pakistan in recent years, notably since the beginning of the so-called war on terror following the 9/11 attacks in the United States of America in 2001.
The forced disappearance of political opponents by State intelligence services continues in spite of the newly elected government's claims that they will swiftly deal with this problem. Since the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) again came to power nearly one year ago, no serious, credible steps have been taken to address these disappearances. Although it has been officially declared that the State intelligence agencies are working under the Prime Minister, they effectively remain out of control and act as if beyond the law.
The ISI and Military Intelligence (MI) agencies are reportedly largely responsible for the arrest and disappearance of more than 4,000 persons since the start of the ‘war on terror’, as reported by various local groups. In the first nine months of the PPP’s government only around a dozen people have resurfaced from intelligence agency custody. During the same period, about 52 persons have gone missing after their arrests, mostly in the southern province of Balochistan, where military operations continue. Certain religious organisations claim that more than 23 persons belonging to various religious groups, mostly young students, are still missing after their arrest.
A former interior minister in the cabinet of ex-president Musharraf told the national assembly in December 2005 that 4000 persons had been arrested in Balochistan province and for the most part were missing. Human rights organizations in the province claim that not more than 100 of these persons have been produced before courts. The current advisor to the Prime Minister and Minister in Charge of Interior Affairs, Mr. Rehman Malik, has again confirmed on February 14, 2009, that around 1000 persons are missing in Balochistan Province, and the Chief Minister of Balochistan says he has a list of 800 missing persons.
The Asian Legal Resource Centre and its sister organization, the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC), have documented a list of missing persons from the province of Balochistan, with the help of a local organization the Anjumane Ettehad e Marri, which details the cases of 872 missing persons from different districts, including 81 women, 151 school girls and 3 infants. Since the war on terror began, large numbers of disappearances have occurred in the North Western Frontier Province (NWFP) where NATO and Pakistani forces are engaged in fighting militant religious fundamentalist forces. Ordinary people are being caught in the crossfire. Religious persons are the main target of disappearances. Both the fundamentalist forces and the, Pakistani authorities are detaining people and taking them to secret places. The militants in general kill them, while the Pakistani authorities are engaged in detaining them incommunicado in unknown locations. When missing persons are released by the Pakistani law enforcement agencies they frequently join the militants, clearly showing that such methods are fuelling rather than attenuating the problem of militancy and terrorism. In the NWFP more than 2000 persons are missing including some officers from Pakistani army.
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